Methods and systems for provisioning software

ABSTRACT

The present invention provides a unified provisioning environment, which comprehensively manages the tasks related to software provisioning. In particular, the present invention manages software provisioning using a hierarchy of commands. The lowest level in the hierarchy comprises distribution commands, which primarily handle base operating system specific tasks of provisioning. The second level comprises profile commands, which associate a configuration file, such as a Linux kickstart file, with a distribution and optionally allow for customization. The third level comprises system commands, which associate remote systems that are involved with the provisioning of the software. The fourth level comprises repository commands, which address configurations and tasks related to updating the software, remote installation procedures, and optionally customizing the software.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/917,917, filed May 14, 2007, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety; and is related to co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/1763,333, entitled “Methods and Systems for Provisioning Software” filed concurrently and commonly assigned.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to provisioning of software.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Software provisioning is the process of selecting a target machine, such as a server, loading the appropriate software (operating system, device drivers, middleware, and applications), and customizing and configuring the system and the software to make it ready for operation. Software provisioning can entail a variety of tasks, such as creating or changing a boot image, specifying parameters, e.g. IP address, IP gateway, to find associated network and storage resources, and then starting the machine and its newly-loaded software. Typically, a system administrator will perform these tasks using various tools because of the complexity of these tasks. Unfortunately, there is a lack of provisioning control tools that can adequately integrate and automate these tasks.

Furthermore, none of the known provisioning control tools provide virtualization installation support unified with other provisioning types on a target machine. Virtualization install support requires knowledge of additional parameters and to date cannot be automated for software rollouts with the current available tools.

Ideally, provisioning control tools would be able to handle the various types of provisioning. For example, many system administrators in data centers utilize Preboot Execution Environment (PXE) installations. However, other forms of provisioning, such as virtualization installations, and re-installations are also common. Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide provisioning control tools that can handle different types of installations.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. In the figures:

FIG. 1 illustrates an exemplary system in which the present invention may be employed; and

FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary process flow of the present invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

The present invention provides a unified provisioning environment, which comprehensively manages the tasks related to software provisioning. In particular, the present invention manages software provisioning using a hierarchy of commands. The lowest level in the hierarchy comprises distribution commands, which primarily handle base operating system specific tasks of provisioning. The second level comprises profile commands, which associate a configuration file, such as a Linux kickstart file, with a distribution and optionally allow for customization. The third level comprises system commands, which associate remote systems that are involved with the provisioning of the software. The fourth level comprises repository commands, which address configurations and tasks related to updating the software, remote installation procedures, and optionally customizing the software.

The unified provisioning environment provides several capabilities and advantages over the known provisioning solutions. For example, the present invention is capable of handling a variety of forms of installations, such as PXE, virtualization, and re-installations.

The present invention enables integrating virtualization into a PXE provisioning infrastructure and provides several options to reinstall running machines as well. The present invention can integrate mirroring of package repositories with the provisioning process, so that a provisioning server may serve as a central mirror point of contract for all of an organization's software needs. In the present invention, mirrored repositories can automatically be used by provisioned systems without additional setup.

Reference will now be made in detail to the exemplary embodiments of the invention. The present invention may be applied to provisioning any form of software, such as Windows systems, UNIX systems, and Linux systems. For purposes of illustration, the present invention will now be explained with reference to implementation to Linux systems, such as Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux by Red Hat, Inc.

Accordingly, the description will first provide some general information about Linux installations. Next, FIG. 1 is presented to explain an exemplary Linux-type system of the present invention. Several examples of the hierarchy of commands will then be explained. Wherever possible, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts

Turning now to the provisioning of Linux systems, many system administrators use what is known as the “kickstart” installation method. Kickstart files are files that specify the intended configuration of the software being provisioned. Kickstart files can be kept on a server and can be read by individual computers during the installation. This installation method allows the use a single or relatively few standard kickstart files to install Linux on multiple machines, making it ideal for network and system administrators.

The kickstart file is a simple text file, containing a list of items, each identified by a keyword. In general, a kickstart file can be edited with any text editor or word processor that can save files as ASCII text. One skilled in the art will recognize that the present invention may be applied to non-kickstart files in Linux provisioning. For example, configuration files such as AutoYAST Answer files used in Novell SuSe Linux and Sun Solaris Jumpstart files may also be used by the present invention.

Typically, a kickstart file is copied to the boot disk, or made available on the network. The network-based approach is most commonly used, as most kickstart installations for Linux systems tend to be performed via a network using NFS, FTP, or HTTP on networked computers. Administrators also find it desirable that kickstart installations can be performed using a local CD-ROM, or a local hard drive.

Using kickstart files, a system administrator can create a single file containing the parameters that are needed to complete a typical Linux installation. For example, kickstart files specify parameters related to: language selection; mouse configuration; keyboard selection; boot loader installation; disk partitioning; network configuration; NIS, LDAP, Kerberos, Hesiod, and Samba authentication; firewall configuration; and package selection.

Referring now to FIG. 1, an exemplary system 100 that is consistent with the present invention is shown. The system 100 may comprise a provisioning server 102, a code repository 104 which provides access to distributions 106 and 108, a set of installation templates 110, a set of exception plugins 112, a helper client 114 running on target machines 116, a scheduler 118, a provisioning database 120 which comprises a distribution tree list 122 and template list 124. Each of these components will now be further described.

Provisioning server (from herein referred to as a “cobbler”) 102 is responsible for: serving as a extensible markup language remote procedure call (XMLRPC) handler; linking to or mirroring install distribution trees and a configuration database; hosting kickstart templates; and hosting plugins. Cobbler server 102 may be implemented as software, such as Python code, installed on a boot server machine and provides a command line interface for configuration of the boot server. In addition, cobbler server 102 may make itself available as a Python application programming interface (API) for use by higher level management software (not shown). Cobbler server 102 supports provisioning via PXE, virtualization, and re-provisioning. As will be described later, the last two modes are performed with the assistance of a helper client 114.

Code repository 104 is responsible for hosting distributions 106 and 108. Code repository 104 may be implemented using well known components of hardware and software.

Distributions 106 and 108 are bundles of software that is already compiled and configured. Distributions 106 and 108 may be in the form of either rpm, deb, tgz, msi, exe etc. formats. As Linux distributions, distributions 106 and 108 are bundles of software that comprise the Linux kernel, the non-kernel parts of the operating system, and assorted other software. Distributions 106 and 108 may take a variety of forms, from fully-featured desktop and server operating systems to minimal environments.

Installation templates 110 are any data structure or processing element that can be combined with a set of installation configurations and processed to produce a resulting configuration file, such as a kickstart file.

Exception plugins 112 is software that interacts with cobbler server 102 to customize the provisioning of software. In general, exceptions plugins 112 are intended to address infrequent customization needs.

Helper client (known as “koan”, which stands for kickstart-over-a-network”) 114 may assist cobbler server 102. Koan 114 allows for both network provisioning of new virtualized guests and destructive provisioning of any existing system. When invoked, koan 114 requests profile information from a remote boot server that has been configured with cobbler server 102. In some embodiments, what koan 114 does with the profile data depends on whether it was invoked with —virt or —replace-self.

In addition, koan 114 enables replacing running systems as well as installing virtualized profiles. Koan 114 may also be pushed out to systems automatically from the boot server. In some embodiments, helper client 114 is also written in Python code to accommodate a variety of operating systems, machine architectures, etc.

Target machines 116 represent the particular machines to which software provisioning is directed. Target machines 116 may represent a wide variety of devices.

Although FIG. 1 shows relatively few number of target machines 116, the present invention is capable of managing a wide range environments, such as datacenters with thousands of machines or server pools with just a few machines.

Provisioning database 120 serves as a data storage location for holding data used by cobbler server 102. For example, as shown, provisioning database 120 will typically comprise distribution tree list 122 and template list 124.

Distribution tree list 122 provides an inventory of distributions 106 and 108 that are hosted or mirrored by cobbler server 102. Template list 124 provides an inventory of templates 110 that are hosted by cobbler server 102.

Now that an exemplary system for the present invention has been described, some of the commands and provisioning processes supported by the present invention will now be described. As noted above, cobbler server 102 manages provisioning using a hierarchical concept of distribution commands, profile commands, system commands, and repository commands. This framework enables cobbler server 102 to abstract the differences between multiple provisioning types (installation, reinstallation, and virtualization) and allows installation of all three from a common platform. This hierarchy of commands also permits cobbler server 102 to integrate software repositories with the provisioning process, thus allowing systems to be configured as a mirror for software updates and third party content as well as distribution content. The present disclosure will now explain the hierarchy of commands further.

Distributions contain information about base operating system tasks, such as what kernel and initrd are used in the provisioning, along with other information, such as required kernel parameters. Profiles associate one of distributions 106 and 108 with a kickstart file and optionally customize it further, for example, using plugins 112. Systems commands associate a hostname, IP, or MAC with a distribution and optionally customize the profile further. Repositories contain update information, such as yum mirror information that cobbler server 102 uses to mirror repository 104. Cobbler server 102 can also manage (generate) DHCP configuration files using templates 110.

Of note, cobbler server 102 uses a provisioning environment that is fully templated, allowing for kickstarts and PXE files to be customized by the user. Cobbler server 102 uses the concept of “profiles” as an intermediate step between the operating system and the installed system. A profile is a description of what a system does rather than what it is installed with. For instance, a profile might describe a virtual web server with X amount of RAM, Y amounts of disk space, running a Linux distribution Z, and with an answer file W.

Cobbler server 102 provides a command line interface to configure a boot server in which it is installed. The format of the cobbler server 102 commands is generally in the format of: cobbler command [subcommand] [—arg1=] [—arg2=]. An exemplary process flow will now be described in which a user may provision software via this command line interface.

FIG. 2 illustrates an exemplary process flow of the present invention. As noted, cobbler server 102 provides a unified provisioning environment. Thus, a user may specify various aspects of software provisioning via a single interface, such as a command line interface or other known interface. Some of the phases of specifying software provisioning in a unified environment will now be explained with reference to FIG. 2.

In phase 1, a user may use various commands of the present invention to specify distributions and install trees hosted by code repository 104, such as a distribution from distributions 106 or 108. A user may add or import a distribution or import it from installation media or an external network location.

In some embodiments, the user may use a manual add command generally of the form: cobbler distro add —name=string —kernel=path —initrd=path [—kopts=string] [—ksmeta=string] [—arch=x86|x86_(—)64|ia64] [—breed=redhat|suse], where

“Name” is a string identifying the distribution, such as “rhel4”.

“Kernel” is an absolute filesystem path to a kernel image

“Initrd” is an absolute filesystem path to a initrd image

“Kopts” is an optional parameter that sets kernel command-line arguments that the distro, and profiles/systems dependent on it will use. For example, —kopts=foo=“bar baz=3 asdf” is an example of a kopts parameter.

“Arch” is an optional parameter that sets the architecture for the PXE bootloader.

“Ksmeta” is an optional parameter that sets kickstart variables to substitute, thus enabling kickstart files to be treated as templates. For example, —ksmeta=foo=“bar baz=3 asdf” is example of a ksmeta parameter. Templating is further described below.

“Breed” specifies a general type of the Linux system distribution, such as Red Hat or Novell SuSE. In some embodiments, the default for breed is “redhat”, which may be a suitable value for Fedora and Centos as well. Specifying “suse” allows the kickstart file parameters to be treated instead like AutoYaST answer files, such that the proper parameters for SuSE answer files are put on the kernel command line. Support for other types of distributions is also possible. The file used for the answer file, regardless of distro breed, is the value used for —kickstart when creating the profile.

In order to import a distribution, cobbler server 102 can auto-add distributions and profiles from remote sources, whether this is an installation media (such as a DVD), an NFS path, or an rsync mirror. When importing a rsync mirror, cobbler server 102 will try to detect the distribution type and automatically assign kickstarts. By default in some embodiments, it will provision by erasing the hard drive, setting up eth0 for DHCP, and using a default password. If this is undesirable, an administrator may edit the kickstart files in /etc/cobbler to do something else or change the kickstart setting after cobbler server 102 creates the profile.

In phase 2, a user may map profiles to the distributions and map systems to the profiles using profile commands and systems commands of the present invention. As noted above, a profile associates a distribution to additional specialized options, such as a kickstart automation file. In cobbler server 102, profiles are the unit of provisioning and at least one profile exists for every distribution to be provisioned. A profile might represent, for instance, a web server or desktop configuration.

In general, the command for adding a profile may be of the form: cobbler profile add —name=string —distro=string [—kickstart=url] [—kopts=string] [—ksmeta=string] [—virt-file-size=gigabytes] [—virt-ram=megabytes], where:

“Name” is a descriptive name, such as “rhel4webservers” or “fc6desktops”.

“Distro” is the name of a previously defined cobbler distribution

“Kickstart” is the local filesystem path to a kickstart file. If this parameter is not provided, the kickstart file will default to /etc/cobbler/default.ks (or whatever is set in /var/lib/cobbler/settings). If this file is initially blank, default kickstarts are not automated. However, an administrator can change the default.ks for an automated installation.

“Virt-file-size” is an optional parameter that sets how large the disk image should be in gigabytes.

“Virt-ram” is an optional parameter that sets how many megabytes of RAM to consume.

“Repos” is an optional parameter that sets a space delimited list of all the repos (created with the “cobbler repo add” and “cobbler reposync” commands) that this profile can make use of during kickstart installation. For example, —repos=“fc6i386updates fc6i386extras” is one example of a repos parameter.

Next, a user may map systems to profiles using system commands of the present invention. In general, systems commands assign a piece of hardware with cobbler server 102 to a profile. Systems can be defined by hostname, Internet Protocol (IP) address, or MAC address. When available, use of the MAC address to assign systems may be preferred.

The general format for specifying Systems commands to cobbler server 102 may be of the form: cobbler system add —name=ip|mac|hostname —profile=string [—kopts=string] [—pxe-address=string] [—ksmeta=string], where:

“Name” is the name that is either a currently-resolvable hostname, an IP address, or a MAC address. When defining Virtualized systems, using a MAC address causes the Virt MAC address to be used for creation. In some embodiments, the name may be “default”. In this situation, the PXE will use the specific profile set for “unconfigured” systems, otherwise it will fall through to local boot.

“Pxe-address” is a feature that may be used to generate the dhcpd.conf file. This setting sets a certain hostname or IP to a given MAC address. This corresponds to the “fixed-address” field in dhcpd.conf.

In phase 3, the user may map repositories and profiles using repository commands of the present invention. In general, repository commands address configurations and tasks related to updating the software, remote installation procedures, and optionally customizing the software. These repository commands may also specify mirroring of the provisioned software. Repository mirroring allows cobbler server 102 to mirror not only install trees 106 and 108, but also optional packages, third party content, and updates. Mirroring may be useful for faster, more up-to-date installations and faster updates, or providing software on restricted networks.

The command for specifying a Repository is generally of the form: cobbler repo add —mirror=url —name=string [—local-filename=string], where:

“Mirror” is the address of the yum mirror. This can be an rsync:// URL, an ssh location, or a http:// or ftp:// mirror location. For example, rsync://yourmirror.example.com/fedora-linux-core/updates/6/i386 (for rsync protocol) http://mirrors.kernel.org/fedora/extras/6/i386/(for http://) user yourmirror.example.com/fedora-linux-core/updates/6/i386 (for SSH).

“Name” is the save location for the mirror. This name corresponds with values given to the —repos parameter of “cobbler profile add”. If a profile has a —repos value that matches the name here, that repo can be automatically set up during provisioning. This means that, if supported, the repo can be used during kickstart install—and—either way, it can be automatically configured on the clients.

“Local filename” specifies, for kickstarts containing the template parameter “yum_config_stanza”, what files to populate on provisioned clients in /etc/yum.repos.d. In other words, if this value is “foo”, the repo would be installed on provisioned clients as “/etc/yum.repos.d/foo.repo”.

Cobbler server 102 may also include other administrative features, such as allowing the user to view their provisioning configuration or information tracking the status of a requested software installation. For example, the “cobbler sync” can be used to repair or rebuild the contents /tftpboot or /var/www/cobbler when something has changed. The command brings the filesystem up to date with the configuration as understood by cobbler server 102. The cobbler sync function may be run whenever files in /var/www/cobbler are manually edited or when making changes to kickstart files.

The following example shows a sequence of commands to create a provisioning infrastructure from a distribution mirror. Then a default PXE configuration is created, so that by default systems will PXE boot into a fully automated install process for that distribution. A network rsync mirror or a mounted DVD location. Accordingly, the sequence of commands may be:

cobbler check

cobbler import —mirrommsync://yourfavoritemirror.com/foo —mirror-name=anyname

# OR

cobbler import —mirror root@localhost:/mnt/dvd —mirror-name=anyname

# wait for mirror to rsync . . .

cobbler report

cobbler system add —name=default —profile=name_of_a_profile1

cobbler system add —name=AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF —profile=name_of_a_profile2

cobbler sync

In this next example, the administrator uses a local kernel and initrd file (already downloaded), and shows how profiles would be created using two different kickstarts—one for a web server configuration and one for a database server. Then, a machine is assigned to each profile. Accordingly, the sequence of commands may be:

cobbler check

cobbler distro add —name=rhel4u3 —kernel=/dir1/vmlinuz —initrd=/dir1/initrd.img

cobbler distro add —name=fc5 —kernel=/dir2/vmlinuz —initrd=/dir2/initrd.img

cobbler profile add —name=fc5webservers —distro=fc5-i386 —kickstart=/dir4/kick.ks —kopts=“something to make my_gfx_card work=42,some_other_parameter=foo”

cobbler profile add —name=rhel4u3 dbservers —distro=rhel4u3 —kickstart=/dir5/kick.ks

cobbler system add —name=AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF —profile=fc5-webservers

cobbler system add —name=AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FE —profile=rhel4u3-dbservers

cobbler report

The following example shows how to set up a repo mirror for two repositories, and create a profile that will auto install those repository configurations on provisioned systems using that profile. Accordingly, the sequence of commands would be:

cobbler check

# set up cobbler distros here.

cobbler repo add —mirror=http://mirrors.kernel.org/fedora/core/updates/6/i386/ —name=fc6i386updates

cobbler repo add —mirror=http://mirrors.kernel.org/fedora/extras/6/i386/ —name=fc6i386extras

cobbler reposync

cobbler profile add —name=p1 —distro=existing_distro name —kickstart=/etc/cobbler/kickstart_fc6.ks —repos=“fc6i386updates fc6i386extras”

In addition to normal provisioning, cobbler server 102 may support yet another option, called “enchant”. Enchant takes a configuration that has already been defined and applies it to a remote system that might not have the remote helper program installed. Users might want to use this command to replace a server that is being repurposed, or when no PXE environment can be created. Thus, the enchant option allows the remote helper client 114 to be executed remotely from cobbler server 102.

If cobbler server 102 is configured to mirror certain repositories, it can then be used to associate profiles with those repositories. Systems installed under those profiles will be auto configured to use these repository mirrors in /etc/yum.repos.d, and if supported these repositories can be leveraged. This can be useful for a large install base, fast installation and upgrades for systems are desired, or software not in a standard repository exists and provisioned systems are desired to know about that repository.

Cobbler server 102 may also keep track of the status of kickstarting machines. For example, the “cobbler status” will show when cobbler server 102 thinks a machine started kickstarting and when it last requested a file. This may be a desirable way to track machines that may have gone inactive during kickstarts. Cobbler server 102 may also make a special request in the post section of the kickstart to signal when a machine is finished kickstarting.

For —virt, cobbler server 102 will create new virtualized guests on a machine in accordance to the orders from cobbler server 102. Once finished, an administrator may use “virsh” and “xm” commands on the guest or other operations. Cobbler server 102 automatically names domains based on their MAC addresses. For re-kickstarting (‘—replace-self’), cobbler server 102 will reprovision the system, deleting any current data and replacing it with the results of a network install.

Referring now back to FIG. 2, in phase 4, cobbler server 102 configures boot methods for the provisioning requested by the user. For example, cobbler server 102 may configure a PXE environment, such as a network card BIOS. Alternatively, cobbler server 102 may compile and configure information for koan client 104. Cobbler server 102 may also optionally configured DHCP and DNS configuration information.

In phase 5, cobbler server 102 serves the request of koan client 114. Koan client 114 may acknowledge the service of information of cobbler server 102 and then may initiate installation of the software being provisioned. Processing now flows to phase 6, in which koan client 114 may either install the requested software, e.g., replace the existing operating system, or install a virtual machine.

Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. For example, the cobbler may contain a templating feature that allows a single kickstart file to be customized on a per-system basis. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.

Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. For example, the cobbler may contain a templating feature that allows a single kickstart file to be customized on a per-system basis. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims. 

1. A method of provisioning software to a target machine, said method comprising: retrieving, by a provisioning server hosted by a boot server machine, at least one software distribution, wherein the provisioning server has access to templates of configurations; identifying, by the provisioning server, one or more resources associated with the target machine; determining, by the provisioning server, a function to be performed by the target machine based on the identified one or more resources associated with the target machine; generating, by the provisioning server, a profile for the at least one software distribution, wherein the profile associates the at least one software distribution with the function to be performed by target machines utilizing the at least one software distribution and wherein the profile links a configuration file to the at least one software distribution; receiving, by the provisioning server, information indicating a system remote from the target machine that will assist in installing the at least one software distribution on the target machine; receiving, by the provisioning server, update information for the at least one software distribution; and automatically installing, by the provisioning server, the at least one software distribution and update information on the target machine based on the profile and with the assistance of the remote system.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein retrieving the at least one software distribution comprises retrieving a Linux distribution.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein retrieving the at least one software distribution comprises retrieving a distribution having a specified kernel.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein retrieving the at least one software distribution comprises retrieving a distribution having a specified initrd.
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein retrieving the at least one software distribution comprises specifying parameters in the configuration file that are to be substituted.
 6. The method of claim I, wherein retrieving the at least one software distribution comprises retrieving a parameter that sets an architecture for a PXE bootloader that will be used in installation of the at least one software distribution.
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the profile links a kickstart file to the at least one software distribution.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the profile links a AutoYAST file to the at least one software distribution.
 9. The method of claim 1, wherein the profile specifies a virtualization disk image size in to the configuration file.
 10. The method of claim 1, wherein the profile specifies an amount of RAM that may be consumed on the target machine in to the configuration file.
 11. The method of claim 1, wherein receiving information indicating the system remote from the target machine that will assist in installing the at least one software distribution on the target machine comprises receiving an IP address of the remote system.
 12. The method of claim 1, wherein receiving information indicating the system remote from the target machine that will assist in installing the at least one software distribution on the target machine comprises receiving a hostname of the remote system.
 13. The method of claim 1, wherein receiving information indicating the system remote from the target machine that will assist in installing the at least one software distribution on the target machine comprises receiving a MAC address of the remote system.
 14. The method of claim 1, wherein receiving update information for the at least one software distribution comprises receiving information indicating a repository mirror for the at least one software distribution.
 15. The method of claim 1, further comprising: determining when the target machine last requested a file; and determining a status of installing the at least one software distribution based on when the target machine last requested the file.
 16. The method of claim 1, wherein installing, automatically, the at least one software distribution and update information on the target machine based on the profile and with the assistance of the remote system comprises installing, automatically, the at least one software distribution via PXE on the target machine.
 17. The method of claim 1, wherein installing, automatically, the at least one software distribution and update information on the target machine based on the profile and with the assistance of the remote system comprises installing, automatically, the at least one software distribution on a virtual machine on the target machine.
 18. A non-transitory computer readable medium comprising instructions of a provisioning server, wherein the instructions, when executed by a processor of a server machine that has access to templates of configurations, cause the processor to perform a method comprising: retrieving at least one software distribution; identifying one or more resource associated with a target machine; determining a function to be performed by the target machine based on the identified one or more resources associated with the target machine; generating a profile for the at least one software distribution, wherein the profile associates the at least one software distribution with the function to be performed by the target machine utilizing the at least one software distribution; receiving information indicating a system remote from the target machine that will assists in installing the at least one software distribution on the target machine; receiving update information for the at least one software distribution; and installing, automatically, the at least one software distribution and update information on the target machine based on the profile and with the assistance of the remote system.
 19. The non-transitory computer readable medium of claim 18, wherein retrieving the at least one software distribution comprises at least one of retrieving a Linux distribution, retrieving a distribution having a specified kernel, retrieving a distribution having a specified initrd, specifying parameters in the configuration file that are to be substituted, or retrieving a parameter that sets an architecture for a PXE bootloader that will be used in installation of the at least one software distribution.
 20. The non-transitory computer readable medium of claim 18, wherein the profile specifies at least one of a virtualization disk image size in the configuration file or an amount of RAM that may be consumed on the target machine in to the configuration file. 